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The New U.S. Role


Article # : 12513 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 7 / 1987  2,534 Words
Author : Wiliam H. Lewis
William H. Lewis is professor of political science at George Washington University.

       The tide of discontent with U.S. policy in southern Africa has swept away "constructive engagement" as an effective Reagan administration strategy for the region. The complex and demanding approach fashioned by Chester A. Crocker, assistant secretary of state for African affairs, has been submerged by the waves of crisis and instability that currently afflict southern Africa. Peaceful resolution of disputes, the leitmotif of all American diplomats, has been transformed from a promising strategy into a pious litany.
       
        The existing debility of American policy has multiple causes, not the least of which is a regional dynamic that impels major actors toward violent solutions. Insurgencies in Angola and Mozambique, rising civil disturbances in South Africa, cross-border raids by South African security forces throughout the region, together with economic sanctions by Pretoria intended to induce the so-called frontline states to adopt policies compliant with South African wishes have all brought into question the premises that shaped constructive engagement. After a six-year run, final interment appears close at hand for this disingenuous approach to a region where fractious forces are at work.
       
        What precisely were the rudiments of the constructive engagement approach that now appears overwhelmed by the correlation of antithetical forces in southern Africa? First, its architect, Crocker, propounded a regional perspective that included an East-West dimension. Improved race relations in South Africa would be the ultimate U.S. objective, but a number of intervening "solutions" to local issues in neighboring areas would be required if reformist impulses in Pretoria were to be encouraged. At the heart of the Crocker approach was an improvement ... (2000 of 16595 Characters)
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